Physics of Everyday Phenomena
9th Edition
ISBN: 9781259894008
Author: W. Thomas Griffith, Juliet Brosing Professor
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Textbook Question
Chapter 7, Problem 8CQ
What is the advantage of a padded dashboard compared to a rigid dashboard in reducing injuries during collisions? Explain using momentum and impulse ideas.
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Chapter 7 Solutions
Physics of Everyday Phenomena
Ch. 7 - Does the length of time that a force acts on an...Ch. 7 - Two forces produce equal impulses, but the second...Ch. 7 - Is it possible for a baseball to have as large a...Ch. 7 - Are impulse and force the same thing? Explain.Ch. 7 - Are impulse and momentum the same thing? Explain.Ch. 7 - If a ball bounces off a wall so that its velocity...Ch. 7 - Is there an advantage to following through when...Ch. 7 - What is the advantage of a padded dashboard...Ch. 7 - What is the advantage of an air bag in reducing...Ch. 7 - If an air bag inflates too rapidly and firmly...
Ch. 7 - If you catch a baseball or softball with your bare...Ch. 7 - Suppose you move your hand forward to meet the egg...Ch. 7 - A truck and a bicycle are moving side by side with...Ch. 7 - Is the principle of conservation of momentum...Ch. 7 - A ball is accelerated down a fixed inclined plane...Ch. 7 - Two objects collide under conditions where...Ch. 7 - Which of Newtons laws of motion are involved in...Ch. 7 - A compact car and a large truck have a head-on...Ch. 7 - A fullback collides midair and head-on with a...Ch. 7 - Two ice skaters, initially at rest, push off one...Ch. 7 - Two shotguns are identical in every respect...Ch. 7 - When a cannon rigidly mounted on a large boat is...Ch. 7 - Is it possible for a rocket to function in empty...Ch. 7 - Suppose you are standing on a surface that is so...Ch. 7 - Suppose an astronaut in outer space suddenly...Ch. 7 - Suppose that on a perfectly still day, a sailboat...Ch. 7 - A skateboarder jumps on a moving skateboard from...Ch. 7 - A railroad car collides and couples with a second...Ch. 7 - Is the collision in question 28 elastic, partially...Ch. 7 - If momentum is conserved in a collision, does this...Ch. 7 - A ball bounces off a wall with a velocity whose...Ch. 7 - A ball bounces off a wall that is rigidly attached...Ch. 7 - A cue ball strikes an 8 ball of equal mass, which...Ch. 7 - Two lumps of clay traveling through the air in...Ch. 7 - Two lumps of clay, of equal mass, are traveling...Ch. 7 - Two cars of equal mass collide at right angles to...Ch. 7 - A car and a small truck traveling at right angles...Ch. 7 - A cue ball strikes a glancing blow against a...Ch. 7 - An average force of 4800 N acts for a time...Ch. 7 - What is the momentum of a 1300-kg car traveling...Ch. 7 - A bowling ball has a mass of 7 kg and a speed of...Ch. 7 - A force of 128 N acts on a ball for 0.45 s. If the...Ch. 7 - A 0.14-kg ball traveling with a speed of 40 m/s is...Ch. 7 - A ball experiences a change in momentum of 64...Ch. 7 - A 75-kg front-seat passenger in a car moving...Ch. 7 - A ball traveling with an initial momentum of 1.7...Ch. 7 - A ball traveling with an initial momentum of 5.1...Ch. 7 - A fullback with a mass of 108 kg and a velocity of...Ch. 7 - An ice skater with a mass of 70 kg pushes off...Ch. 7 - A rifle with a mass of 3.4 kg fires a bullet with...Ch. 7 - A rocket ship at rest in space gives a short blast...Ch. 7 - A railroad car with a mass of 13,000 kg collides...Ch. 7 - A 4150-kg truck traveling with a velocity of 12...Ch. 7 - For the two vehicles in exercise E16: a. Sketch to...Ch. 7 - A car with a mass of 1600 kg traveling with a...Ch. 7 - Refer to example box 7.2 and figures 7.17 and...Ch. 7 - A fast ball thrown with a velocity of 40 m/s...Ch. 7 - A bullet is fired into a block of wood sitting on...Ch. 7 - Consider two cases in which the same ball is...Ch. 7 - A car traveling at a speed of 22 m/s...Ch. 7 - A 1600-kg car traveling due east with a speed of...
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- What external force is responsible for changing the momentum of a car moving along a horizontal road?arrow_forwardUnder what circumstances is momentum conserved?arrow_forwardA 5.0-g egg falls from a 90-cm-high counter onto the floor and breaks. What impulse is exerted by the floor on the egg?arrow_forward
- Is it possible for a small force to produce a larger impulse on a given object than a large force? Explain.arrow_forwardYou friend claims that momentum is mass multiplied by velocity, so things with more mass have more momentum. Do you agree? Explain.arrow_forwardWhich has a larger magnitude of momentum: a 3000-kg elephant moving at 40 km/h or a 60-kg cheetah moving at 112 km/h?arrow_forward
- Professional Application Explain in terms of momentum and Newton's laws how a car's air resistance is due in part to the fact that it pushes air in its direction of motion.arrow_forwardExplain in terms of momentum and Newton’s laws how a car’s air resistance is due in part to the fact that it pushes air in its direction of motion.arrow_forwardTwo identical objects (such as billiard balls) have a one-dimensional collision in which one is initially motionless. After the collision, the moving object is stationary and the other moves with the same speed as the other originally had. Show that both momentum and kinetic energy are conserved.arrow_forward
- Starting with equations m1v1=m1v1cos1+m2v2cos2 and 0=m1v1cos1+m2v2sin2 for conservation of momentum in the x- and y -directions and assuming that one object is originally stationary, prove that for an elastic collision of two objects of equal masses, 12mv12=12mv22+mv1v2cos(12) as discussed in the text.arrow_forwardA car and a large truck traveling at the same speed collide head-on and stick together. Which vehicle undergoes the larger change in the magnitude of its momentum? (a) the car (b) the truck (c) the change in the magnitude of momentum is the same for both (d) impossible to determine without more information.arrow_forwardA cruise ship with a mass of 1.00107kg strikes a pier at a speed of 0.750 m/s. It comes to rest after traveling 6.00 m, damaging the ship, the pier, and the tugboat captain’s finances. Calculate the average force exerted on the pier using the concept of impulse. (Hint: First calculate the time it took to bring the ship to rest, assuming a constant force.)arrow_forward
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Impulse Derivation and Demonstration; Author: Flipping Physics;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9rwkTnTOB0s;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY